Stab Magazine | Modern Craftsmen – Steve Gourlay

Just Wrapped: Finals Day! Stab High Japan 2025 Presented By Monster Energy — Re-watch Below

148 Views

Modern Craftsmen – Steve Gourlay

From Stab issue 61. Words by Derek Rielly. If you’ve ever kicked your way around a skate park, you’ll know Steve Gourlay as some kind of icon. As a teenager, Steve was an aspiring pro whose kink was vert but who ripped his ankle apart at a training camp and who then turned to photography. In the process, Steve documented the best of Australian skateboarding in its pivotal growth through the nineties and 2000’s and with the deftest of artistic touches (Hasselblads! Perfect composition!). Now, it’s the furniture company Steve has created with his gal Anoushka, Thomo & Coach, that is turning on the Melbourne-based artisan. For Steve, who builds, while his gal works on the styling and design alongside, the quality of the build and the integrity of the design is everything. “Craftsmanship can come in various forms, but to us it’s the passion behind what you produce. Without that, Thomo & Coach wouldn’t even exist. We love wrangling with different materials and designs, trying to understand the material we’re working with so we can use it in the best possible way. It’s a never-ending learning curve. I’ve designed and built skate ramps throughout my life including Globe World Cup courses at Rod Laver Arena and, believe me, you know about it if you don’t get it right, especially on a large scale. All these experiences push you to realise there are no shortcuts.” The importance of beauty? “Beauty for us is in the detail. Not just the aesthetics but the combination of how the piece functions, looks and feels.” Can Steve describe what it feels like to build furniture with his hands? Is it a joyous experience? Is it physical? Delicate? “When I’m in the workshop making the piece I feel a kind of contentment. I get to switch off from being a photographer and do something equally creative, yet which is very tangible. I love the feel of using timber. There can be highs and lows like anything and immense frustration when something doesn’t quite work out, especially working with materials which are essentially one-offs. There isn’t much room for error.” And, his feeling towards mass-production and the loss of quality to meet a price point? “Okay, in one way you could argue it’s great, that good-looking furniture can still be accessible to everyone. But, at the end of the day, you see all these same pieces of low-cost, low-quality furniture in hard rubbish on the street and no one cares. It’s made of materials which can’t be easily re-used or refashioned and reflects the wastefulness of our culture where even furniture is disposable. This has definitely inspired us to do things differently. We talk to our clients about the ‘after-life’ or alternate uses of commissioned pieces and consider that in the design. We’ve developed a range of crates and accessories to extend the life of some of the ‘mass-produced-furniture-pieces-we-all-own’, to avoid seeing them made redundant.” FOR THOSE MODERN CRAFTSMEN IN OUR WORLD, JUMP OVER HERE AND MAKE YOUR WORK KNOWN. WE’D LOVE TO SEE IT. AND, YOU COULD WIN $100k.  

style // Mar 8, 2016
Words by Stab
Reading Time: 3 minutes

From Stab issue 61. Words by Derek Rielly.

If you’ve ever kicked your way around a skate park, you’ll know Steve Gourlay as some kind of icon. As a teenager, Steve was an aspiring pro whose kink was vert but who ripped his ankle apart at a training camp and who then turned to photography. In the process, Steve documented the best of Australian skateboarding in its pivotal growth through the nineties and 2000’s and with the deftest of artistic touches (Hasselblads! Perfect composition!).

Now, it’s the furniture company Steve has created with his gal Anoushka, Thomo & Coach, that is turning on the Melbourne-based artisan. For Steve, who builds, while his gal works on the styling and design alongside, the quality of the build and the integrity of the design is everything.

“Craftsmanship can come in various forms, but to us it’s the passion behind what you produce. Without that, Thomo & Coach wouldn’t even exist. We love wrangling with different materials and designs, trying to understand the material we’re working with so we can use it in the best possible way. It’s a never-ending learning curve. I’ve designed and built skate ramps throughout my life including Globe World Cup courses at Rod Laver Arena and, believe me, you know about it if you don’t get it right, especially on a large scale. All these experiences push you to realise there are no shortcuts.”

The importance of beauty? “Beauty for us is in the detail. Not just the aesthetics but the combination of how the piece functions, looks and feels.”

Can Steve describe what it feels like to build furniture with his hands? Is it a joyous experience? Is it physical? Delicate? “When I’m in the workshop making the piece I feel a kind of contentment. I get to switch off from being a photographer and do something equally creative, yet which is very tangible. I love the feel of using timber. There can be highs and lows like anything and immense frustration when something doesn’t quite work out, especially working with materials which are essentially one-offs. There isn’t much room for error.”

And, his feeling towards mass-production and the loss of quality to meet a price point? “Okay, in one way you could argue it’s great, that good-looking furniture can still be accessible to everyone. But, at the end of the day, you see all these same pieces of low-cost, low-quality furniture in hard rubbish on the street and no one cares. It’s made of materials which can’t be easily re-used or refashioned and reflects the wastefulness of our culture where even furniture is disposable. This has definitely inspired us to do things differently. We talk to our clients about the ‘after-life’ or alternate uses of commissioned pieces and consider that in the design. We’ve developed a range of crates and accessories to extend the life of some of the ‘mass-produced-furniture-pieces-we-all-own’, to avoid seeing them made redundant.”

FOR THOSE MODERN CRAFTSMEN IN OUR WORLD, JUMP OVER HERE AND MAKE YOUR WORK KNOWN. WE’D LOVE TO SEE IT. AND, YOU COULD WIN $100k.

 

Comments

Comments are a Stab Premium feature. Gotta join to talk shop.

Already a member? Sign In

Want to join? Sign Up

Advertisement

Most Recent

Mason Ho Follows MP’s Trail, Discovers The Delicate Art Of Not Getting Arrested

"That’s it. We’re cooked. I just told the boys this lane was mine, now I’m…

May 31, 2025

8x World Champion Skater Pedro Barros On God, Localism, And Almost Being A Semi-Pro Surfer

Wisdom from one of the greatest two-sport talents of our generation.

May 30, 2025

Where’s The World Title Going In 2025?

A post-cut debrief featuring thoughts from world number one Jordy Smith.

May 29, 2025

Axel Lorentz Steps Down As Head Shaper At Pukas, Starts Eponymous Board Label

What comes after a twelve-year career and five Stab In The Dark finals?

May 28, 2025

Aquatic Outlaws: How Surfing’s Wild West Was Won

Before the Margaret River Pro, there were a few rogue men from Perth.

May 27, 2025

Vale Jack McCoy: The Pillar Of Surf Cinema Passes On At 76

The creator of Blue Horizon, The Occumentary, the Billabong Challenge and more goes out swinging.

May 27, 2025

2025 Belongs To Power Surfing

Jordy Smith notches first multi-win season of his career + Gabriela Bryan overpowers Caity Simmers.

May 27, 2025

Jordy Smith Is The Number 1 Surfer In The World

Yes, in 2025. A Margaret River Pro day 4 report.

May 26, 2025

This Is Why We Do It — Stab High Japan x Monster Energy 2025, Dissected

Hughie Vaughan, Mikey Wright, Sierra Kerr, Loci Cullen, and Eden Walla are your 2025 Japanese…

May 25, 2025

Watch: Finals Day Highlights From Stab High Japan Presented By Monster Energy

Episode Three of Poolside hosted by Kona Big Wave.

May 25, 2025

Re-Watch — Finals Day At Stab High Japan 2025 Presented By Monster Energy

$50,000 in prize money and the biggest chlorinated ramp to ever host a contest. 

May 24, 2025

Watch: Day One Highlights From Stab High Japan Presented By Monster Energy

Episode Two of Poolside hosted by Kona Big Wave.

May 24, 2025

Mikey Wright “Puts The Roof Straight On”, Traps 25 Souls Inside A Japanese Aerial Inferno

A (semi) objective Day 1 report of Stab High Japan 2025 x Monster Energy

May 24, 2025

Watch The Replay — Day One Of Stab High Japan Presented By Monster Energy

Watch the Opening Round of the Open Men's, Ladybirds, and Bottle Rockets.

May 23, 2025

Watch Julian Wilson, Harry Bryant, Mikey Wright, And More Warm-Up For Stab High Japan Presented By Monster Energy

Episode One of Poolside, brought to you by Kona Big Wave.

May 23, 2025

Matt Meola On Archery, Not Surfing, And Why He Doesn’t Regret Sacrificing $15k At Last Year’s Aerial Altar

"It was for the good of surfing."

May 23, 2025

Watch: New Occy Just Dropped

Cloudbreak, Bells, and an ageless approach from the '99 World Champ.

May 22, 2025

Who’s Going To Win Stab High Japan Presented By Monster Energy?

Yago Dora, Luke Cederman, Coco Ho, Kaipo Guerrero, Curren Caples, Liam O’Brien, and more share…

May 22, 2025
Advertisement